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Shingles satisfy the basic requirements 
of architecture—utility, durabilty 
and beauty 


PRINTED BY THE LUMBERMEN’S PRINTING CO. SEATTLE, WASH. 


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Introductory 


The primary purpose of presenting this little brochure to’ you is to emphasize the beauty 
and durability of Red Cedar Shingles, not alone as a permanent and satisfactory roof covering 
for every style of house having a roof slanting more than 30 degrees, but to show the charm 
and elegance of houses covered “from crest to foundation” with shingles. 


Not only do Red Cedar Shingles add considerably to the natural life of the buildings which 
they cover, thereby enhancing their selling value, but they give a touch of style, finish, and 
appearance to all types of buildings not obtainable with any other kind of material. 


The misrepresentation made in the literature of “process” or so-called “patent” roofings 
has never been vigorously protested, in as much as wooden shingles have always and will al- 
ways have a ready sale in spite of the falsehoods that are being circulated. 


Nature’s own product is unfailing, never changing and everlasting. 


The Red Cedar Shingle Manufacturers’ Association, in placing this booklet in your hands, 
believes that you are anxious to know the truth about the building material which has been 
the standard for decades and which at the present moment does not lack any of the superb 
qualities that have been recognized since the first Red Cedar Shingle proved its worth. 

Dame Nature furnishes a house covering today which is in every way superior to any 
which has ever been devised by the hands of man. 


RED CEDAR SHINGLE MANUFACTURERS ASSOCIATION. 


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FARM HOUSES C OF RED CEDAR SHINGLES. 


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Max L Keiru Architect, Max L. Kerru, Architect, BunGaLowcrarv Co., 
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C C Dost’& Co, Architects, Herrick IMrnovemMent Co., E. W. Stit_we.u & Co., Architects, 
Cost $2800. Seattle, Wn. Cost $2600. Seattle, Wn. Cost $2200. Los Angeles, Cal. 


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CrarIsMAN Buncaow Co., INc., E. E. Green, Architect, CRAFTSMAN BuncaLow Co., INC., 

Cost $1000. Seattle, Wn. Cost $1800. Seattle, Wn. Cost $1800. Architects Seattle, Wn. 


Living Room 
12x 2q 


VW. VoorueEss, Architect, B J Erickson, Architect, Sanvers & Lawton, Architects, 
Cost $1750 Seattle, Wn. Cosr $2200 Seattle, Wn Cosr $1600 Seattle, Wn. 


King Solomon, reputed wisest man, built with Cedar 


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Roserts & Roserts. Architects, TuHE BuneaLow Co., THE BunaaLow Co., 
Cosr $2600 Portland, Ore. Cost $2800, Seattle, Wn. Cosr $1500. Seattle, Wn. 


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Pow ER & West, Architects, 


Cost $1500 


Medford, Ore. 


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Cost $1500 


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Woovroorke & CoxnstanLe Architects, W. Marsury SoOMERVELL, Architect, DanteL R Huntinoton, Architect, 
Cost $2600 Tacoma Wn | } Cost $3500, Seattle, Wn. Cosr.$6000, - Seattle, Wn 


A roof of Red Cedar Shingles is the Roof et Age 


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Butiarp & Hii, Architects Wooproort & Constas.t, Architects 
on £99() : 1 OF ae he ALE e, : E E Green, Architec 
Cost $3200 Tacoma, Wn Cosr $2100 Tacoma, Wn. Cosr $5000 : a eee Wn 


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A MODEL FARM—AII buildings are built with Red Cedar Shingles from crest to foundation 


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Pertinent Facts About Red Cedar Shingles 


Washington Red Cedar has proven to the 
satisfaction of all unprejudiced students that 
it withstands exposure to all kinds of weather 
much better than any other species of wood. 
It stands without a peer the best wood in the 
world market for all kinds of exterior con- 
struction. 

Red Cedar Shingles make the perfect cover- 
ing, which, painted or unpainted, stained or 
unstained, when laid according to a few sim- 
ple rules, will outlast the superstructure which 
it protects. No other roofing can be compared 
with it. It will live to praise its wonderful 
maker long after we have all been laid away. 


How to Lay Shingles so That They Will 
Last a Lifetime 


We will readily admit that there are shingled 
roofs everywhere that are not properly laid 
and therefore show holes and spring leaks, 
but these defects are not due to the shingles 
themselves but, as investigation will prove, to 
nails that have rusted out, leaving the shingles 
loose and ready to be blown off with the first 
strong gust of wind. 

It has been established as a fact that our 
shingles, if properly put on with cut iron, 


galvanized wire, zinc or copper nails, will last 
from thirty to forty years—the average life 
of a residence building. As the cost of pro- 
viding galvanized wire or, better yet zinc nails, 
is but little more there can be no excuse for 
using plain wire nails. 

Pacific Coast Architects in particular are 
very enthusiastic about the use of shingles not 
only on account of their being the least expen- 
sive of all exterior construction material but 
because of their adaptability to the fullest and 
truest expression of architectural beauty and 
design embodied in the extremely popular and 
fascinating Pacific Coast type of dwellings 
known as Bungalows. 

Beautiful architectural effects may be se- 
cured by the use of Red Cedar Shingles. A 
careful study of the designs in this booklet 
offer some ideas which you can utilize. 

An effective method of laying shingles on 
the side of houses can be noted in the pic- 
tures of the dwellings designed by Herrick 
Improvement Co., E. W. Stillwell & Co. and 
D. R. Huntington. This effect is obtained by 
laying one course 2 or 3 inches to the weather 
and the next 7 or 6 inches. It makes a very 
handsome design. 


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This is a photograph of a split shingle. It 
was taken from an old Block House erected in 
1846, which today shows no signs of decay 


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The initial purchasing price of Red Cedar Shingles, 
of the highest grades, is not only less, in most localities, 
than shingles made from other woods, but they actually 
cost you less per 100 square feet than the higher grades 
of roofing paper, purchased from your local dealer. 

The only possible saving in 
buying so-called “patent,” “pre- 
pared” or “rubber” and “asphal- 
tum” roofing paper comes by 
accepting the cheaper and infer- 
ior grades of same, intended for 
temporary construction only, and 
in the hours of labor required 
to lay the factory-made substi- 
tute for Nature’s own make. 

It may require a few more 
hours to lay wooden shingles, 
but the additional time is amply 
offset by the fact, not to be 
overlooked, that in shingling the 
roof boards can be laid two or three inches apart, 
while for any kind of roofing paper the entire roof must 
be shiplapped. The latter kind of superstructure not 
only requires more hours of labor to build but adds 
from 80 cents to $1 more per hundred square feet to 
the cost of material. 


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A Garage Built of Red Cedar Shingles 


Taking all of these items into consideration a shingled - 


roof will not cost you any more, laid down, than a roof 
covered with the best prepared roofing paper. 

Should the first cost of shingles, in your locality, be 
a trifle more, please remember that it is the last cost 
so far as the actual up-keep cost is concerned, as the 
Red Cedar shingles on the mar- 
ket today retain a_ sufficient 
amount of natural “preservative 
oils” to render any kind of ap- 
plication unnecessary. A coat 
of oil or a good stain every five 
years will, of course, add to their 
beauty but nothing to their dura- 
bility. 

Most roofing paper manufac- 
turers urge their customers to 
“care” for their products by 
painting it with a special kind of 
paint every two or three years, 
or whenever it begins to show 
signs of wear. You cannot point to such advice given 
by the Red Cedar Shingle manufacturers. 

Ambitious manufacturers of shingle stains, in their 
literature rightly emphasize the beautiful, harmonizing 
color effects which may be secured by staining shingles 
with one or more of their widely different shades of 
stain. Asa “preservative” a stain is unnecessary. 


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The First Cost and Up-keep of Red Cedar Shingles 


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The Story of the Red Cedar Shingle 


Nothing is permanent but change—unless it is archi- 
tecture’s basic principle of combining utility and beauty. 

Crude builders in dawning barbaric ages employed 
that principle. It was the end sought by builders when 
civilization had its rise in Egypt and Memphis ruled 
the world. Greece followed with the beautiful Temples. 
Centuries later, with Memphis 
buried beneath a hundred feet 
of drifting sands, Venice became 
the center of art, architecture 
and education—but the combi- 
nation of utility and beauty was 
still paramount. Today this 
same ancient principle is the 
fundamental factor in the highly 
developed science of modern con- 
struction. 

Washington Red Cedar Shin- 
gles combine utility and beauty 
—satisfying every requirement 
of the things so essential in the best of architecture. 
The wood from which these shingles are made is more 
durable under all sorts of exposure than any other 
commercial species. 

A glance at the preceding pages will show the beauti- 
ful effects obtainable in building by the use of Red 
Cedar Shingles. There Utility, Beauty and Durability 


The old Fort Borst Block House here shown was built in 1845, and the 
split shingles on roof are as sound today as the the day they were put on 


are combined in the highest degree with true economy. 

In the year of 1910 there were 11,824,475,000 shingles 
manufactured in the United States. Washington pro- 
duced 8,333,639,000 of the entire country’s total output. 

The tree from which these shingles are manufactured 
attains its best development in the rich, moist soil of 
Western Washington, although 
red cedar is found all along the 
Pacific Coast from Cape Mendo- 
cino in Northern California, to 
Sitka, Alaska, in altitudes from 
sea level to 7,000 feet. 

The oldest Washington Red 
Cedar of which there is an offi- 
cial record was cut in the Sno- 
qualmie National Forest (Puget 
Sound region) in 1909. 

That tree had been growing 
1,137 years. It got its start in 
the year 772 A. D., when Charle- 
magne first conquered Lombardy and was crowned 
Emperor of Rome, some 720 years before the discovery 
of America. 

At the time of the Norman Conquest and the Battle 
of Hastings, this Washington Red Cedar was 294 years 
old; when the first Bible was printed, it was 690 
years old; and when Cortez began the conquest of 


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Mexico it was 747 years old. These facts are interest- 
ing in that they illustrate the slowness with which 
nature has developed the tree that produces the “Roof 
of Ages” and the home that 
is durable and beautiful. 
What nature has been so 
long in producing nature 
does not rapidly destroy. 


The United States Gov- 
ernment, through its trained 
experts in the Forest Ser- 
vice, has made a particular 
study of Washington Red 
Cedar—the great shingle 
wood. The following ex- 
cerpt is from one of the most 
recent reports of these ex- 
perts: 

“Undoubtedly the quality 
which speaks most in favor 
of this wood (Western Red 
Cedar) is its durability. 

“It is more durable under 
all sorts of exposure than most 
other commercial species. 

“Large cedar logs have lain half buried in wet ground 
for centuries, with but little sign of decay, and the 
charred trunks of veteran cedars loom up over vast 
areas and remain sound for many decades, as mute 


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This cedar was actually cut into sample shingles by the Page Lumber Company 
Buckley, Washington, and distributed as advertising matter 


Frequently the moss upon the trunks of fallen forest 
giants has provided a bed for the seeds of other trees, 
which have sprouted, taken root and grown to ma- 


witnesses of the carelessness of the early settlers and 
the wanton recklessness of the Indians, in allowing fires 
to escape control. This cedar is affected by compara- 
tively few diseases. * * *” 

Stripped of the customary 
conservative routine of an 
average governmental re- 
port, the substance of it 
is a strong endorsement of 
the durability of cedar and 
furnishes the prospective 
builder some food for fore- 
thought. The report should 
settle all disputes along these 
lines. 

The wood of the Wash- 
ington Red Cedar is light, 
soft, straight-grained and 
free from resin. It does not 
warp, shrink or check. For 
building purposes to which 
it is particularly adapted, it 
represents centuries of Na- 
ture’s best producing efforts. 


tunity, as shown in the picture. Records have been 


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obtained where the tree growing 
over the fallen trunk was upwards 
of six hundred years old, and yet 
the wood in the fallen tree—after 
having been dead and down for 
two centuries before Columbus 
crossed the Atlantic, was sound 
enough for the manufacture of 
merchantable lumber. 


The tree upon which the dog is 
standing had 350 annular rings, 
showing it to have been 350 years 
old when it fell. The tree growing 
over it has 750 rings, and is there- 
fore 750 years of age. Forest 
scientists tell us that each ring de- 
notes a year of growth. Then the 
tree on which the dog is standing 
was growing in the year 800 A. D. 
It grew and fell and was lying 
covered with moss, when Richard 
the First, called the Lion Hearted, 
was knocking at the gates of Acre, 
during the third crusade. 

In 1910, after lying on the ground 
nearly 800 years, it was cut into 
merchantable shingles and distrib- 
uted broadcast over the United 
States as an advertisement of the 


An Old Dutch Mill in the State of Washington 
— Covered with Red Cedar Shingles 


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-unequaled durability of the Red 


Cedar of Washington. 

Page 38, Bulletin 95, U. S. Forest 
Service, June 30, IQII, says: 

“Cases are vouched for in which 
the ages of trees growing upon 
buried logs show that the prostrate 
trunks fell five or six centuries ago, 
and even more, and though they 
have lain so great a period they are 
found fit for merchantable lumber.” 

Government reports indicate that 
the Indian was quick to recognize 
the adaptability of Red Cedar. 

“This cedar furnished materials 
to the Indians for totem poles, dug- 
out canoes and floats for fish nets 
for which its lightness made it espe- 
cially valuable. 

“This cedar was also most useful 
to the pioneer settler, for, on ac- 
count of its straight grain, he could 
easily split from the trunk shakes 
and boards for his rude cabin.” 

Cut into shingles and used on 
your home from “crest to founda- 
tion,” it remains true to nature and 
serves you a lifetime faithfully and 
well. 


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About Grades and Ordering 


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There are four first grades of Shingles in the 
different thicknesses and lengths as follows: 


Perfections, 18”, packed 5 bundles to M, thickness, 
834” to bunch. 

Eurekas, 18”, packed 4 bundles to M, thickness, 934” 
to bunch. 

Clears, 16”, packed 4 bundles to M, thickness, 914” 
to bunch. 

Extra *A*, 16”, packed 4 bundles to M, thickness, 
734” to bunch. 


There are five recognized second grades or 
selected culls from the above as follows: 


Puget A, 18”, 8” Clear Butt, packed 5 bundles to M, 
thickness, 814” to bunch. 

Skagit A, 18”, 8” Clear Butt, packed 4 bundles to M, 
thickness, 914” to bunch. 

10” Clear, 16”, 10” Clear Butt, packed 4 bundles to M, 
thickness, 9” to bunch. 

Clear A, 16”, 6” Clear Butt, packed 4 bundles to M, 
thickness, 9” to bunch. 

Standard A, 16”, 6” Clear Butt, packed 4 bundles to 
M, thickness, 714” to bunch. 


In all of the culls, short shingles and feather 
tips are allowed, but they are good for purposes 
where a cheap, temporary roof is desired. The 
10 inch Clear 16 inch Shingle will work well for 
the siding of Summer Bungalows and Cottages 
and will lay a good roof. 


Full grading rules furnished on application. 


16 inch Shingles laid 4% inches to the 
weather will lay 115 or more square feet; 5 
inches to weather, about 130 square feet. 


18 inch Shingles laid 5% inches to the weather 
will lay over 140 square feet. 


We ship only in full carloads to regular deal- 
ers. Your local lumberman undoubtedly car- 
ries Red Cedar Shingles. If he does not, ad- 
vise us. 


Rep CEDAR SHINGLE MANUFACTURERS’ ASSOCIATION, 


Fo 
i 
). reee~ 


511-514 White Building, Seattle, Wash. 


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